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The Ultimate Kitchen Cabinet Decluttering Checklist

Kitchens tend to look neater when belongings are kept behind closed cabinet doors rather than stored in the open. The key is trying to keep the belongings behind the closed cabinet doors as neat and tidy as possible. Use this checklist the next time you want declutter your kitchen cabinets.

The Ultimate Kitchen Cabinet Decluttering Checklist

1.
FIND OUT
WHAT’S IN THERE
oo Clear countertops so you have room to
sort items from your cabinets.
oo Consider marking areas of the counter,
table or floor with category names for
sorting purposes.
oo Place three bins nearby — one each for
items you will purge, sell or donate.
oo Take notes about things that must be
replaced, or things you need but don’t have.
oo Empty everything out of your cabinets.
THE ULTIMATE KITCHEN
CABINET DECLUTTERING ChecklistKitchens look much neater when items are stored behind closed cabinet doors.
Here are steps to follow to declutter your kitchen cabinets.
✔
DETERMINE
‘WHAT DO I DO WITH ALL OF THIS?’
oo For each item removed from a cabinet,
determine whether you want to keep it.
oo If you’re not sure, ask whether you’ve
used the item in the last year. If not, it
should probably go.
oo If you want to get rid of it, determine whether
you want to trash it, sell it or donate it.
oo Place the items that you’re keeping in groups,
based on where they are most often used in
the kitchen.
oo Dispose of food items that are stale, look
suspect, or are past their expiration date.
TAKE STEPS
TO AVOID THE NEXT DECLUTTER
oo Stack items whenever possible.
oo Store smaller items inside of larger ones —
nest bowls, pots and pans.
oo Store lids separately from pots or
containers whenever possible.
oo Use shelf dividers, hanging racks and Lazy
Susans, as they create more space by keeping
certain items out of the way and making them
easier to access.
DECIDE
WHERE EVERYTHING SHOULD GO
oo Define “work zones” based on which areas of
your kitchen are used for specific tasks.
oo Plan to store appropriate items in cabinets
closest to these work zones (e.g., pots and
pans closest to the stove, dishes and glasses
closest to the dishwasher).
oo Organize pantry shelves like the supermarket
does, with rows of similar items, the oldest
items in the front, and labels all facing out for
easy identification.
STORE EVERYTHING WHERE IT NEEDS TO GO
oo Keep items used most frequently on the bottom shelves of upper cabinets or the upper shelves of
bottom cabinets (to minimize stretching and crouching).
oo Conversely, keep items less frequently used on higher shelves within upper cabinets, and lower shelves
in lower cabinets.
oo Store rarely used items, such as roasting pans, in the most difficult-to-reach storage areas.
oo In each cabinet, place the most frequently used items in front of items you use less frequently.
oo Create a “junk drawer” for items that defy categorization; use a divider or another drawer organizer
to arrange them.
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